textproduct: Amarillo
This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.
KEY MESSAGES
Issued at 625 PM CDT Fri Mar 27 2026
- Breezy northeast winds and dry conditions will result in critical Fire Weather for most of the Panhandles through 8PM.
- Breezy southwest winds and dry conditions in the northwest Panhandles will result in critical Fire Weather conditions on Saturday.
- Fire Weather the rest of the forecast will remain elevated given the very dry fuels and above normal temperatures, limit activities that can cause a fire.
UPDATE
Issued at 625 PM CDT Fri Mar 27 2026
Winds remain breezy out of the northwest early this evening across the Panhandles. Wind gusts continue to decrease, but remain in the 20-30 mph range. These winds are resulting in Red Flag Threat Index values of 1-2 which continues the critical fire weather threat. Winds will be around 10-15 mph or less by 8-10 PM this evening and the Red Flag Warning will be allowed to expire at that point. Only minor edits were made to the ongoing forecast, most notably for sky cover as mid level clouds are prevalent across much of the area.
Muscha
SHORT TERM
(This evening through Saturday night) Issued at 140 PM CDT Fri Mar 27 2026
Strong pressure gradient that accompanied the front last night continues to gradually relax and winds are taking their time to come down. While the overall temperature is in the 40s and will climb into the 50s this afternoon and evening, the wind chill will be much cooler, as it's currently still in the 30s. Despite the wind chill, the air temperature is warming and the we are drying out so the afternoon relative humidity dropping in the low 20s to teens, with winds still in the 20-25 mph range will support critical Fire Weather to continue (See Fire Weather Section). With cooler highs today in place, and the cold air still lingering over the Panhandles tonight, we are looking at overnight lows in the upper 20s to mid 30s. Wind chills should not be too bad tomorrow morning as we do expect fairly light overnight winds, but some of the colder spots could get down around 20 with the wind chills in the northern Panhandles.
Overall, the high pressure that brought us these very warm temperatures the past few days, really hasn't gone anywhere, it's just the strong cold air push from the system that was over the great lakes, interrupted our warm. That pocket of colder air will still remain and modify the airmass under the high pressure over the Panhandles for Saturday. It will be eroded out by Sunday, but for the time being we'll only see highs in the mid 60s in the southeast to lower 70s in the northwest, as warmer air is working into the Panhandles from the west. We'll be looking at the northwest Panhandles winds picking up in the 20-25 mph range on Saturday afternoon which will support critical Fire Weather, mainly due to a lee surface low in eastern CO, providing just enough of a surface gradient to cause us some breezy conditions. Currently do not anticipate winds strong enough for any highlights, as gusts are expected to be around 25-35 mph with the far northwest maybe seeing 40-45 mph gusts. Winds will remain in the 10-15 mph range through the overnight hours on Saturday night which supports a mild Sunday morning where lows will be in the 40s to lower 50s.
Weber
LONG TERM
(Sunday through next Thursday) Issued at 140 PM CDT Fri Mar 27 2026
High pressure will dominate the Panhandles again Sunday through at least Monday night and possibly Tuesday. Very warm temperatures in the upper 80s to mid 90s will be possible. Tuesday is in question as a cold front is expected to arrive mid week, and right now it looks to be on Tuesday during the day which has the highs split in the 80s to the south and 70s to the north. The faster or slow this front tracks will have an impact on the highs for the day, or if it becomes more of a possible Critical Fire Weather day. Wednesday is projected to be cooler with highs in the 60s a a low chance of pops (~20%). Not too exciting as this looks like a dry slot situation, followed by warmer air returning on Thursday with highs back in the mid 70s to lower 80s. All that being said, if the right conditions occur, and the weather system that moves in tracks a certain way, there is a path to possible rain, or maybe even some storms on Wednesday, however given the 20% pops, the 80% chance of not getting anything seems to be the more likely scenario at this time.
Weber
AVIATION
(00Z TAFS) Issued at 625 PM CDT Fri Mar 27 2026
VFR conditions are forecast with this TAF issuance. Winds will decrease over the next few hours and will rotate clockwise overnight, with winds eventually being out of the south by near sunrise. Winds will increase by late morning to early afternoon on Saturday, with gusts upwards of 30-35 kts at KDHT and KGUY out of the south to southwest. Mid level clouds will remain in place for the first half of this TAF cycle before clearing out.
Muscha
FIRE WEATHER
Issued at 140 PM CDT Fri Mar 27 2026
We continue to have north northeast winds on the back side of the cold front this afternoon. Those winds will start to come down over time, but are still expected to remain in the 20-25 mph range through 4pm, and over 20 mph through 7pm. Thereafter the winds will turn east and really start to relax to less than 10 mph as we head toward midnight. Given the very dry fuels (>90th percentile) the winds are still enough to support critical Fire Weather. The concern was more for any active fires when the winds were higher, but now that they are coming down, it's still more of an IA concern, that any new starts could still spread quickly at least through early evening. If a new fire starts later in the day, be aware of the winds coming around the clock to where they become more southerly by morning. By mid to late morning on Saturday they will begin to ramp up in the northwest Panhandles. This will be strong enough, and with mild conditions tomorrow we'll likely see some critical Fire Weather in the northern Panhandles with RFTI's in the 2-3 range, and that's all it takes with fuels this dry.
Moving forward, we will remain elevated to near critical for the remainder of the forecast period as very warm and dry conditions will return Sunday through Tuesday. Will not rule out the critical conditions, but overall, that would just be due to any localized areas that might have winds that over perform.
Weber
AMA WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
TX...Red Flag Warning from 10 AM to 8 PM CDT Saturday for TXZ001>005.
Red Flag Warning until 8 PM CDT this evening for TXZ001>020-317.
OK...Red Flag Warning from 10 AM to 8 PM CDT Saturday for OKZ001>003.
Red Flag Warning until 8 PM CDT this evening for OKZ002-003.
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